Not yet a member?Join now!|Lost password
06/14/2012 | Press release
distributed by noodls on 06/14/2012 18:11
June 14, 2012
Mars Odyssey Mission Status Report
PASADENA, Calif. -- In a step toward returning NASA's
Mars Odyssey orbiter to full service, mission controllers
have tested a spare reaction wheel on the spacecraft for
potential use with two other reaction wheels in adjusting
and maintaining the spacecraft's orientation.
After more than 11 years of non-operational storage, the
spare reaction wheel passed preliminary tests on Wednesday,
June 12, spinning at up to 5,000 rotations per minute
forward and backward. Odyssey engineers plan to substitute
it for a reaction wheel they have assessed as no longer
reliable. That wheel stuck for a few minutes last week,
causing Odyssey to put itself into safe mode on June 8,
Universal Time (June 7, Pacific Time). Safe mode is a
precautionary status with reduced activity.
"We are taking steps to assess the replacement of the
troublesome wheel with the spare that Odyssey has been
carrying for exactly this purpose," said Mars Odyssey
Project Manager Gaylon McSmith of NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "If the assessment
results are positive, this will put us on a path toward
resuming full use of Odyssey."
Like many other spacecraft, Odyssey uses a set of three
reaction wheels to control its attitude, or which way it is
facing relative to the sun, Earth or Mars. Increasing the
rotation rate of a reaction wheel inside the spacecraft
causes the spacecraft itself to rotate in the opposite
direction. The configuration in use since launch combines
the effects of three wheels at right angles to each other
to provide control in all directions. The orbiter carries a
fourth reaction wheel skewed at angles to all three others
so that it can be used as a substitute for any one of them.
This spare wheel had not rotated since before Odyssey's
April 7, 2001, launch.
Odyssey can also use thrusters to control its attitude.
Reaction wheels offer the advantage of running on renewable
electricity from the orbiter's solar array, rather than
drawing on the finite supply of thruster fuel. They also
provide more precise control of pointing, which can enable
higher data-rate communications through the orbiter's
directional antenna.
Odyssey has worked at Mars for more than 10 years, which is
longer than any other Mars mission in history. Besides
conducting its own scientific observations, it serves as a
communication relay for robots on the Martian surface. NASA
plans to use Odyssey and the newer Mars Reconnaissance
Orbiter as communication relays for the Mars Science
Laboratory mission during the landing and Mars-surface
operations of that mission's Curiosity rover.
Odyssey is managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in
Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver built
the spacecraft. JPL and Lockheed Martin collaborate on
operating the spacecraft.http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/odyssey
.
Guy Webster 818-354-6278
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
June 13, 2012
guy.webster@jpl.nasa.gov
2012-176